Changes Make School Breakfast More Popular

National School Breakfast Week: Ohio & West Virginia Schools Get High Marks for School Breakfast

A student enjoys chocolate milk as a part of her school`s breakfast offering. While breakfast programs are not a new concept, research shows more students will eat school breakfast if served outside the cafeteria. Watkins Elementary School in Columbus, Ohio adopted breakfast-in-the-classroom and teachers have seen significant improvements from their students. The Ohio School Breakfast Challenge hopes to see more success stories like this. Click here for more: bit.ly/1Ex981U

COLUMBUS, Ohio, February 25, 2015 – Schools in the Ohio and West Virginia are scoring high marks for changes they have made in their school breakfast programs. The announcement comes in anticipation of National School Breakfast Week on March 2-6, 2015.

Many Ohio schools are adopting new strategies in an effort to increase the number of students eating school breakfast, and those schools are seeing the results. At Watkins Elementary School in Columbus, Ohio the number of students eating breakfast has nearly doubled over the past year, according to Principal Tom Revou.

Revou said that the moving breakfast from the school cafeteria into the classrooms has made a major impact. “The results we’ve seen from moving the breakfast from the cafeteria into the classroom are huge. Students simply come into the building and walk to the carts and pick up a nutritional breakfast and and walk to their classroom and they can start eating there. It’s more of a community and family type of atmosphere,” he said.

Changes like having breakfast in the classroom are boosting the number of students eating school breakfast in many areas. According to recent statistics, in this region, West Virginia had the largest increase in the nation in the number of kids eating school breakfast.

Ohio ranks 8th in the number of students eating school breakfast. However, there is room for improvement which is why the Ohio School Breakfast Challenge encourages schools to serve breakfast in alternative settings, like the classroom, so more students are reached.

Joe Brown, director of food services for Columbus Public Schools, recognizes the benefits of students eating school breakfast. “If they’re hungry they’re not thinking about what’s going on in the classroom, what their teacher is telling them. By having a full belly and by getting that breakfast in them, they’re ready to learn for that day,” he said.

Studies have shown that students who eat breakfast on a regular basis score more than 17 percent higher on math tests, on average, and are 20 percent more likely to graduate than students who don’t eat breakfast.

Nationally, more than 13 million children participate in school breakfast programs. That’s up about half a million since last year.

About American Dairy Association Mideast The American Dairy Association Mideast is the Ohio affiliate of the National Dairy Council (NDC), a leader in dairy nutrition research, education and communication since 1915. On behalf of dairy farmers, ADA Mideast provides timely, science-based nutrition information to, and in collaboration with, a variety of stakeholders committed to fostering a healthier society, including educators, school nutrition directors, health professionals, academia, industry, consumers and media. For more information, visit www.drink-milk.com and www.ohiodairyfarmers.com

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A student enjoys chocolate milk as a part of her school`s breakfast offering. While breakfast programs are not a new concept, research shows more students will eat school breakfast if served outside the cafeteria. Watkins Elementary School in Columbus, Ohio adopted breakfast-in-the-classroom and teachers have seen significant improvements from their students. The Ohio School Breakfast Challenge hopes to see more success stories like this. Click here for more: bit.ly/1Ex981U

Young students munch on a school breakfast before class begins. Serving breakfast in the classroom at school can mean a world of difference for educating students. Third-grade teacher Kathryn Marcum and Watkins Elementary School Principal Tom Revou have noticed calmer classrooms and improved focus on school work. This school has doubled the number of breakfasts served to students, and that`s why the Ohio School Breakfast Challenge encourages schools to serve breakfast outside the cafeteria to reach more students. Details here: bit.ly/1Ex981U

Kids start the day off right by eating breakfast at school. With the help of school breakfasts, students are more prepared for lessons. Initiatives like the Ohio School Breakfast Challenge encourage schools to be more innovative in the way breakfast is offered so more students can be served. Click here for more: bit.ly/1Ex981U

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